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A full-time student at a school that has a regular teaching staff, course of study, and a regularly enrolled student body at the school, or
A student taking a full-time, on-farm training course given by a school described in (1), or by a state, county, or local government agency.
A full-time student at a school that has a regular teaching staff, course of study, and a regularly enrolled student body at the school, or
A student taking a full-time, on-farm training course given by a school described in (1), or by a state, county, or local government agency.
If the person is a high school student and took classes through a college, he or she is a full-time student if they are enrolled at a school for the number of hours or classes that the school considers full time. They must be full-time for some part of each of 5 calendar months during the year. This means even if they were a full time student for just one day of the month, the month counts and would be considered as a full time student for tax purposes.
Per IRS, if
your child is still in high school but takes classes at or through a college,
university or trade school, you may qualify to write off those tuition costs as
part of the tuition
and fees tax deduction or the Lifetime Learning Credit. For example, if your child enrolls in a biology
course at the local college as part of an early-entry program while he's still
in high school, you could use the tuition that you pay to the college for the
deduction. The deduction is limited to $4,000 per year.
OK, but what if they only went to high school? Or even elementary school? It seems, from what Howard1948 said, those children would be full-time students as well. Right?
@kundor You are missing the point. You cannot get education credits or deductions for grades K-12 on a federal return so it does not help you to say a K-12 student is a full-time student. There are only a few states that allow any sort of credit/deduction for K-12 students on a state return.
(As far as I know, the states that offer any sort of K-12 deductions/credits are Arizona, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa,Louisiana, Minnesota, and Wisconsin)
I have a son that’s 3 in early head start. Is it considered a full time student
@J18nette No, you do not need to say that your toddler is a full-time student. When the software asks if a dependent is a full-time student it is asking to see if you are going to need to be prompted to enter college tuition, or expenses for higher education.
yes
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